Inner Resurrection for Job 14:14
Job 14:14 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Job 14 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Job asks whether the dead shall live again and vows to wait for his change. The verse treats death as a doorway to inner renewal and patient expectancy.
Neville's Inner Vision
Death is not a curtain but a door in your own consciousness. When Job asks, If a man die, shall he live again? he is naming the moment your awareness recovers its own continuity. The days of my appointed time are not days of fate but the rhythms of your inner state. In Neville's sense, you are the I AM, the vitality that refuses to end; change comes not by altering outer events but by shifting the assumption that you are separate from Life. Resurrection is the awakening that the next appearing life is already present in the now, a victory of your inner story. The question becomes an invitation to revise: imagine the alive you, the ever-present you, as already living, while the current appearances are but a temporary costume. If you dwell in longing, you reinforce the old belief; if you revise and feel it real that you are always alive, the die of limitation dissolves. Your history is memory pressed by belief; the present is your creative power. Expect your change as a natural unfolding of your inner I AM.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes and assume the feeling that you are living now in your renewed life; speak the phrase I AM alive now, my change is here, until perception aligns with the new state.
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